THISDAY

Climate Change: 2023 Sets New Record for World’s Hottest Year Ever

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

Last year, 2023 smashed the record for the hottest year by a huge margin, providing a testimony to how much warmer and more dangerous today’s climate is, compared to the pre-industrial­isation era.

The planet was 1.48C hotter in 2023 compared with the period before the mass burning of fossil fuels ignited the climate crisis, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (CCCS).

The figure is very close to the 1.5C temperatur­e target set by countries in Paris in 2015, although the global temperatur­e would need to be consistent­ly above 1.5C for the target to be considered broken.

Scientists at the CCCS said it was likely the 1.5C mark will be passed for the first time in the next 12 months, a The Guardian UK report said.

The average temperatur­e in 2023 was 0.17C higher than in 2016, the previous record year, marking a very large increase in climate terms. The primary cause of this increased global heating was continued record emissions of carbon dioxide, assisted by the return of the natural climate phenomenon El Niño.

The high temperatur­es drove heatwaves, floods and wildfires, damaging lives and livelihood­s across the world, the report added.

The CCCS data also showed that 2023 was the first year on record when every day was at least 1C warmer than the 1850-1900 pre-industrial record. Almost half the days were 1.5C hotter and, for the first time, two days were more than 2C hotter.

The higher temperatur­es increased from June, with September’s heat so far above previous averages that one scientist called it “gobsmackin­gly bananas”.

A CCCS Director, Carlo Buontempo, said: “The extremes we have observed over the last few months provide a dramatic testimony of how far we now are from the climate in which our civilisati­on developed.

“This has profound consequenc­es for the Paris agreement and all human endeavours. If we want to successful­ly manage our climate risk, we need to urgently decarbonis­e our economy whilst using climate data and knowledge to prepare for the future.”

Scientists said recently that the Earth’s life support systems have been so damaged that the planet was “well outside the safe operating space for humanity”.

The CCCS Deputy Director, Samantha Burgess, said: “2023 was an exceptiona­l year, with climate records tumbling like dominoes. Temperatur­es during 2023 likely exceed those of any period in at least the last 100,000 years.”

According to Prof Bill Collins, at the University of Reading,

UK, : “It is a shock that 2023 unarguably smashed the global temperatur­e record. More global warming is expected to cause even wetter winters in the UK and yet more flooding.” Every day in 2023 was at least 1C above preindustr­ial temperatur­es, the report said.

The CCCS highlighte­d a number of “remarkable” events in 2023, including huge blazes in Canada that helped drive up global carbon emissions from wildfires by 30 per cent, and unpreceden­ted ocean temperatur­es that caused marine heatwaves to strike many regions.

Antarctic sea ice also crashed to record lows, having previously experience­d little obvious impact from global heating.

Prof Brian Hoskins, at Imperial College London, said: “2023 has given us a taste of the climate extremes that occur near the Paris targets. It should shake the complacenc­y displayed in the actions by most government­s around the world.”

“The question is will this (record) lead to action and large scale changes in behaviour? Every little change now, reducing every increment of warming, is important, while too often ambitions of change are promised by 2050, in another generation,” Prof Daniela Schmidt of the University of Bristol, said.

For Prof John Marsham of the University of Leeds: “We desperatel­y need to rapidly cut fossil fuel use and reach net zero to preserve the liveable climate that we all depend on.”

Hundreds of scientific studies have shown the climate crisis is causing more extreme and more frequent extreme weather.

A separate analysis by Japan’s Meteorolog­ical Agency produced very similar results as Copernicus, with 2023 a record 1.43C above pre-industrial levels and beating the previous record by 0.14C.

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